Draining the Swamp?

One of the rallying cries for President-elect Trump was to drain the swamp of corruption. Compliance professionals could think of many things that could happen to remove conflicts or the appearance of conflicts.

Personally, as a compliance professional and a voter, I was disappointed to learn that Hillary Clinton did a poor job of walling off donations to the Clinton Foundation from her role as Secretary of State. If she had established a clear protocol, she could have easily dismissed the charges that donors were paying to gain access.

It is even more disappointing to hear President-elect Trump dismiss the concerns about conflicts between his sprawling business empire and his role as president. There are a little over two weeks until he steps into office and there has been little to show that he has taken material steps to remove the conflicts.

The latest muck in the swamp is Congress eviscerating the independent Office of Congressional Ethics.

Compliance professionals spend a great deal of energy to have independence for reviewing programs and conducting investigations. Direct contact with the board of directors allows compliance to avoid company executives from stifling a problem.

Under the ethics change pushed by Rep. Bob Goodlatte, R-Va., the non-partisan Office of Congressional Ethics would fall under the control of the House Ethics Committee. That committee is composed of sitting members of Congress, five Republicans and five Democrats.

Given the new rules, any investigation can be shut down along party lines before a review has begun.

It’s not that the OCE was fully independent. It was not authorized to sanction members, officers or employees of the House. The Ethics Committee has exclusive authority to determine if a violation has occurred and what the sanction should be. The rule change allows an investigation to shut down before it gets any traction.

This is not a theoretical problem. Through the third quarter of 2016, the OCE started 35 reviews which led to 17 referrals to the House Ethics Committee for review for the 114th Congress.

It sounds like there is little draining of the swamp and more like the swamp is filling up.

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